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Carl A. Button
compiled
by Columbian staff in 1989
In the
early days, bankers were viewed as a figure of some power and
prestige, and, frequently, even communities of but a few hundred
people had at least one.
Carl
A. Button began his banking career in one such small place,
La Center. He later moved to Woodland, where customers were
more plentiful.
He
was born in Albion, Neb., in 1886, and started work in stores
in Nebraska.
Later
he lived in Portland a short time, and in 1913 entered the banking
business at La Center with an uncle, W.C. Mansfield. Button
was cashier of the La Center State Bank, which was capitalized
at $10,000, and also sold real estate. Mansfield was bank president
for several years, and F.F. Myers was president in the 1920s.
The
timber industry had provided a big economic impetus for north
county but had declined by the '20s.
In
1931 Button moved to Woodland, where his business was known
as Securities State Bank. He was the president and largest stockholder
until his retirement in 1952 because of ill health.
Button
and his wife, Daisy, moved from La Center in 1941 to Cardai
Hill in Clark County, across the old Lewis River bridge from
Woodland. They moved in 1956 to Woodland.
In 1961, the Columbia
River Presbytery purchased the land and buildings at Cardai Hill for a retreat
and campground. Button died in January 1966.
Return to Clark
County Ancestors
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